Publication: Eyewitness memory distortion following co-witness discussion: a replication of Garry, French, Kinzett, and Mori (2008) in ten countries
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Ito, Hiroshi
Barzykowski, Krystian
Grzesik, Magdalena
Janssen, Steve M. J.
Khor, Jessie
Rowthorn, Harriet
Wade, Kimberley A.
Luna, Karlos
Albuquerque, Pedro B.
Kumar, Devvarta
Advisor
Publication Date
2019
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
We examined the replicability of the co-witness suggestibility effect originally reported by Garry et al. (2008) by testing participants from 10 countries (Brazil, Canada, Colombia, India, Japan, Malaysia, Poland, Portugal, Turkey, and the United Kingdom; total N=486). Pairs of participants sat beside each other, viewing different versions of the same movie while believing that they viewed the same version. Later, participant pairs answered questions collaboratively, which guided them to discuss conflicting details. Finally, participants took a recognition test individually. Each of the 10 samples replicated the Garry et al. finding: Participants often reported on the final test a non-witnessed answer that their co-witness had stated during the collaboration phase. Such co-witness suggestibility errors were especially likely when the witness had not disputed the co-witness's report during the collaboration phase. The results demonstrate the replicability and generalizability of the co-witness suggestibility effect.
Description
Source:
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition
Publisher:
AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
Keywords:
Subject
Psychology, Experimental